The Irregularity
of English spellings
President
Andrew Jackson once remarked, “It’s a d____ poor mind that can think of only
one way to spell a word!” Many Americans would readily agree. In fact, the
English language is notorious for its spelling irregularities. Looking at the
glass as being half-empty, it is true that only about half of our spellings
exactly match their sounds.
What
a crazy system, in which the word fish could be spelled as “ghoti.” That’s /f/
spelled “gh” as in rough, /i/ spelled “o” as in women, and /sh/ spelled /ti/ as
in nation. Or how about the fact that the “ur” sound /ur/ can be spelled
differently five times in one sentence? Her nurse first works early. Or how
about the fact that the “sh” sound /sh/ can be spelled in 14 different ways?
shine, sugar, ocean, tissue, ration, fuchsia, shist, pshaw, spacious, nauseous,
anxious, conscious, chaperone, mansion.
However,
looking at the glass as being half-full, the fact that 50% of the spellings
exactly match their sounds certainly provides a helpful foundation upon which
to build good spelling. We don’t have to memorize every word individually. Upon
this 50% foundation, an additional 30% of spellings which conform to about
eight of the most useful spelling rules can be added. This leaves about 20% of
the words that must be memorized. We call these “Outlaw Words” for good reason.
Jessie James couldn’t even spell his own name!
Additionally,
our vocabulary is an amalgam of linguistic and historical influences. Over 50%
of our academic words are built on ancient Greek and Latin word parts. French
and Spanish add to our spelling lexicon as well. So, by studying languages we
also improve our English spelling. If fact, spelling and vocabulary have a
reciprocal relationship-spelling influences vocabulary and, conversely,
vocabulary influences spelling.
So,
given that our English spelling system is not simplistic, what should we do?
1. Master the 50% foundation. The common
sound spellings are very consistent. A wonderful multiple choice assessment of
these patterns can be downloaded free at .
2. Learn the eight conventional spelling
rules that will add on another 30% of the spelling words that would be
otherwise irregular.
3. Memorize the common Outlaw Words. Many of
these are our most frequently used words.
Make up memory tricks such as “you would rather have more dessert than a
desert” or the “principal is my pal” for difficult words that do not follow the
spelling patterns or conventional spelling rules.
4. Memorize the most frequently misspelled
words and commonly confused words.
5. Memorize homophones: words that sound the
same, but are spelled differently.
6. Study the etymological (how the word was
formed in its historical context) connections from Old and Middle English.
7. Study the derivational spellings from
other languages. Example: colonel from the French
For
individual sound-spelling worksheets that correspond with the TSV Spelling
Assessments, spelling rules with memorable raps and songs on CD, spelling
tests, Greek and Latin affixes/roots worksheets, syllable practice,
spelling-vocabulary games, and more to differentiate spelling and vocabulary
instruction, please check out Teaching Spelling and Vocabulary. Also check out
Differentiated Spelling Instruction, the complementary fourth through eighth
grade (Levels A-E) standards-based spelling series, designed to integrate
instruction in spelling, structural analysis, and vocabulary. Each level has 32
weekly spelling pattern lessons and all the resources needed to differentiate
spelling instruction: spelling pattern word lists with spelling sort
worksheets, formative and summative assessments with recording matrices, review
games, memory songs with MP3 links, supplementary word lists, and more.
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